Democracy, Agency, and the Stateaims to contribute to a comparatively informed theory of democracy. Professor O'Donnell begins by arguing that conceptions of 'the state' and 'democracy', and their respective defining features, significantly influence each other. Using an approach that is both historical and analytical, he traces this relationship through the idea of legally sanctioned and backed agency which grounds democratic citizenship. From this standpoint he explores several aspects of the democratic regime and of the state, distinguishing four constitutive dimensions (bureaucracy, legality, focus of collective identity, and filter). He goes on to examine the role played by the idea of 'the nation' or 'the people', and the ways in which the state represents itself to different sections of society, especially in countries marred by deep inequality and pervasive poverty.
Drawing on the examples of democratic and non-democratic regime, he discusses the dialogical spaces congenial to democracy, as well as examining the options that may or may not enable agency, and the complex comparative and ethical issues raised by the intersection of agency with globalization and legal pluralism.Throughout these discussions several comparative vistas are opened, especially but not exclusively toward Latin America. The book concludes by offering a justification of democracy, even of the flawed democracies that nowadays abound.
Oxford Studies in Democratizationis a series for scholars and students of comparative politics and related disciplines. Volumes concentrate on the comparative study of the democratization process that accompanied the decline and termination of the cold war. The geographical focus of the series is primarily Latin America, the Caribbean, Southern and Eastern Europe, and relevant experiences in Africa and Asia. The series editor is Laurence Whitehead, Official Fellow, Nuffield College, Oxford University.
Author(s): Guillermo O’Donnell
Series: Oxford Studies in Democratization
Edition: Hardcover
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Year: 2010
Language: English
Pages: 264
Tags: Democracy; State, The.
Contents
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List of Tables vi
Introduction 1
1. The Democratic Regime (or Political Democracy),
and Citizenship as Agency 13
2. Agency: Origins, Concomitants, and Expansion 31
3. The State: Definition, Dimensions, and Historical Emergence 51
4. The Varying Referents of the State: Nation, People, Citizenry 73
5. The State as Law: Contributions and Ambivalences 93
6. The Multiple Faces of the State and its Underlying Unity 115
7. Dialogics, Agency, and Democracy 133
8. An Overview of Latin America 145
9. Social Context, Options, and Convergences 167
10. The Conundrums of Globalization and Legal Pluralism 183
11. Conclusion 203
Bibliography 217
Index 255